UPSC Civil Services Exam 2018: 10 mistakes most aspirants make

Any aspirant irrespective of their academic background can
realise the dream of clearing the Union Public Service Commission’s civil
service examination (CSE) and join the most elite services of the country by
preparing well.

Any aspirant irrespective of their academic background can
realise the dream of clearing the Union Public Service Commission’s civil
service examination (CSE) and join the most elite services of the country by
preparing well.

But there are some mistakes that most UPSC CSE aspirants makes
and thus fails to clear the hurdle.

Here are the 10 mistakes and how to avoid them:

1. Not sticking to the syllabus

One of the biggest myths every CSE aspirant carries with him
at some point in time is that the syllabus of CSE is unlimited and anything can
be asked under the sky. To some extent this is true but taking your eyes
completely off the syllabus can prove fatal in long run and can cost you your
resources, time, money, and energy. Most of the aspirants start off without
going through the syllabus prescribed by the UPSC and within no time find
themselves in no man’s land.

The syllabus is the roadmap of preparation. It should be the
Bible of any aspirant’s course of preparation for this highly coveted exam.
Therefore, it needs to be followed and referred at every step of preparation.

2. Not referring to previous years’ question papers

If the syllabus is the roadmap, referring to previous years
question papers is like indicators for the right turn at the right time during
the journey of the CSE preparation, which most of the students realise at a
very later phase of the time.

Every step of preparation (unit/section/chapter) should be
followed by an instant reference to the questions asked in the recent years
(both prelims and mains) pertaining to the respective article. This helps the
aspirant to mould his/her preparation in accordance with the latest trends of
the questions put up by the board.

3. Collecting books

Mukherjee Nagar and Old Rajinder Nagar are often termed as
the ‘Mecca and Medina’ of UPSC preparation in India and the local markets of
these UPSC hubs are flooded with various books of numerous authors and
publications. However, only handpicked books are genuinely relevant for the
effective preparation of the examination but due to incomplete knowledge of the
UPSC CSE preparations most of the students end up piling books in their room
turning it into a junkyard instead of an ideal place of learning.

An aspirant should consult seniors who have cleared the
examination (preferable), experienced mentors and genuine/reliable sources and
then go for buying of resources and study material so that instead of becoming
a ‘waste’ it turns into a proper ‘invest’ment.

4. Underestimating NCERT

This is the most microscopic and grave mistake committed by
almost a huge majority of the competing crowd. Ignoring NCERT and directly
jumping on a heavyweight book can be the ‘beginning of the end’ of your UPSC
CSE preparation.

For example, if an aspirant directly starts up with DD Basu
for Indian Polity and Constitution of India, he is bound to end up in a soup.
Instead, it has to be steadily initiated with basic reference from Class 8-12
NCERT social science textbooks, a subject which is popularly termed as
‘civics’.

5. Lack of writing practice

The preliminary stage of the examination is not considered
as selection criteria for enlisting the final merit list for service selection
and cadre allocation. The Mains stage is the ‘main’ part of the whole selection
process which does not only require mere writing answers but the aspirant has
to equip himself with a fluent flow of knowledge, facts and wisdom in a very
precise and skilful manner. Lack of writing skill, which aspirants find it to
be the most difficult part to overcome, if not rectified within correct time,
is a sure guarantee of failure.

To avoid this, writing practice on daily basis rigorously
and religiously is a must. However, for real-time results, aspirants must stick
to exam oriented writing instead of blogging which will definitely increase the
typing skills instead of writing skills.

6. Illicit manner of choosing optional

Availability of books and study material in the market,
ongoing marking and scoring trends of the subject, length and extent of the
syllabus and last but not the least, overlapping with the general studies
paper. These are the views and opinions which generally run around an
aspirant’s mind while choosing an optional which at the end may cause utterly
disastrous results.

‘Interest’ and ‘inclination’ towards the subject should be
the core entities of thought process while choosing the optional. Have a look
at the syllabus, go through the previous year’s question papers and most
importantly if you can invest hours after hours with the subject without
looking at the ticking clock, your inner conscious itself will give you the
answer of UPSC CSE preparation’s most important answer of ‘choosing an
optional’.

7. Not understanding the crux of newspapers

Trying to go through multiple newspapers with an overview
instead of creatively surfing anyone. Collecting and relying on magazines for
current affairs (except The Yojana) as magazines can be a supplement to a
newspaper but not a substitute for it. And not understanding ‘how to read’ and
‘what to read’ in a newspaper reaps low yields in the long run.

Every newspaper has 3 components if viewed from examination
point of view.

Events: This gives you facts. For example, Booker Prize of
the year

Issues: This provides you with views and reviews and helps
to develop your individual understanding and opinion over various subjects
conventional and contemporary. For example, Syrian war crisis and refugee
rehabilitation (IR), Naxalism and insurgency in the northeast (internal
security).

Gossips:

In addition to this, newspaper articles can be categorised
under various segments of news viz. international, India and the world,
national, states, business, science and technology, defence, space, sports,
persons in the news, prizes and awards and many more which will also enable an
aspirant to frame well structured Essays (Paper I).

Therefore, effective
utilisation of newspaper can provide soul to the whole body of an aspirant’s
UPSC CSE preparation subject to careful and persistent efforts.

8. Not analysing SWAT

In the long run, students not only fail to maintain the
tempo and enthusiasm but also often find themselves in the middle of unbalanced
wrong directional preparation because they don’t undergo the analysis of their
strength and weakness as the nature and the requirement of the examinations
demands high dynamism and adaptability from the candidates as every subject has
to be approached in their own unique ways (For example, history and geography).

Therefore, it becomes indispensable for an aspirant to
consistently keep cross checking the progress and depressions, the grip over
strong areas and loose fist over the weaker sections of the syllabus through
regular mock tests and classroom test series from time to time.

9. Lack of proper time management

Any ambition without a time frame is nothing more than a
fantasy. Since aspirants invest years for this prestigious examination, time
management and completing the targets within the stipulated time frame is one
of the most essential necessities for clearing this examination which most of
the students fail to cope up with due course of time.

Time management can act
as a horse or a hurdle; it all depends on the rider (the aspirant).

To cleverly clear up with this parameter, every aspirant
should have a very sound difference between a task or a target which is
‘URGENT’ and ‘IMPORTANT’.

The day an aspirant realised the crystal clear
difference between the two, it will eventually result in comfortable
prioritising of short-term tasks and targets to gain long term fruits and
benefits.

10: Avoiding consistent revision

The secret of getting ahead is getting started. But the
essence of reliving information on the examination day is to making a habit of
retaining the information first. In simple words, students read, read and read
but very often don’t revise what they read which may result in poor information
retention and to the point delivery of the facts and figures on the day of
examination.

Revision is the key. There has to be a very well maintained
cohesion between what you read and ‘revise’ what have you read till date. Video
lectures, subject audios and group discussions (group study) can prove to be a
boon for an aspirant of UPSC CSE.

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